Yamaha DSP A1 Amplifiers

Yamaha DSP A1 Amplifiers 

DESCRIPTION

The DSP-A1 is a 7-channel processor/amplifier providing the finest performance available for music and video sound. The processor provides 42 possible programs including Dolby Digital, DTS, Dolby Pro Logic, Yamaha's proprietary Tri-Field Processing, Cinema DSP, and Hi-Fi Digital Sound Field Processing.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-8 of 8  
[May 04, 2018]
Kent


Strength:

This is a sheer monster of an amplifier and DWP modes are very flexible depending on your preference. It cope well with however hard you push it ( and not upsetting the neighbors)! Mine is hooked up to the well known tried and tested Bose accoustimass series speakers which are amazing together with matching centre and rear surround speakers. Wether playing cds, DVD’s, or multimedia it never relaxes and gives you everything and more in terms of power, drive and impressive range of sound that you would be hard pushed to better elsewhere. If you are a true audiophile and only insist on high end quality and value, then the Dsp-A1 is a very fine choice indeed!

Weakness:

None I can find

Price Paid:
800
Purchased:
Used  
Model Year:
1998
OVERALL
RATING
5
[Oct 02, 2012]
George
Audio Enthusiast

The Yamaha DSP A1 is the best kept secret in all of audio land! I'm confident that back in the 90's when Yamaha was designing this unit, they told their designers to take off the gloves and make a statement to the consumer electronics industry -- and that they did!

Unless you invest in higher-end separate componets, you'll have a hard time finding a better value and bang for your audio buck. Especially these days when you can find the DSP A1 for around $200.00 +-.

Originally, I powered my B&W Nautilus 804 / HTM1 5.1 surround system with the DSP A1 and it did a fantastic job. No complaints whatsoever! But if you really want an audio treat, hook the DSP A1 up in dedicated direct (raw) 2 channel stereo mode with a pair of high-end bookshelf speakers with a tight subwoofer and listen to some reference CD's. WOW! Now that's some magical audio for two or three hundred bucks!

If you want an extremely high quality and versatile home theater 5.1 unit or just a splended 2-channel stereo intregrated amplifier for your personal listening pleasure, then treat yourself to a DSP A1. With the money you'll save from buying a new top-shelf receiver, you'll be able to better afford the quality speakers that this unit is built to power.




OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Aug 28, 2002]
pangl
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Very musical. Cinema DSP sounds really nice. 7 channel support.

Weakness:

Decoding selection is limited. D/A quality is not exactly audiophile-grade. Binding posts too close to each other.

The DSP A1 is a very musical yet powerful A/V receiver I have listened to. It is very muscial and drive the Magnepan 3.3R effortlessly (see below). Let me point out the negatives first. (1) The D/A quality is very good but definitely not audiophile grade. If you are serious in listening to your CDs, get an external D/A. I personally use Wadia 25 d/a which happens to be an digital pre-amp too. Great clarity and soundstage and smoothness. (2) The binding posts are too close to each other (but not as bad as the Pioneer's). (3) Lack of decoder option. Well, this is a rather outdated unit in terms of all those crazy 6.1, 7.1 Neo, Matrix ... whatever buzzwords that are throwing around. I personally couldn't care less. You are better off getting the A1 which is a top-notch A/V receiver, and then take advantage of its 7 channel support (external decoder in) instead. Think about multichannel SACD for example, A-1 is the perfect choice. So this is not a negative to me, but will be for those of you who enjoy the latest and greatest decoding options. This receiver drives my Magnepan 3.3R surprisingly well with the Wadia 25. Without it, you could not get earth-shattering volume (who would do that with the Magnepan anyway?). For those of you who are as crazy as me. I actually compared Wadia 25 + Mark Levinson 23 VS Wadia 25 + DSP-A1. The #23 beats the DSP-A1 in every regard. But not at a large margin as you would expect. I'd say about 80% of #23 when listening to pop and chamber music, and 70% when listening to large orchestral works. If you compare the price between the #23 (2 channel power amp, $2000 used) and DSP-A1 (7 channel A/V receiver, $600 used) and do the math, you should see an used DSP-A1 is a true bargain. P.S. The DSP-A1 betters the Rotel (cheap quality from China nowadays), Pioneer (cross-talk, poor imaging and musicality), Technics (that's for your Bose speaker lovers only), Denon (way overpriced, flabby Q/A) and B&K (again, way overpriced, not as flexible as the A1).

Similar Products Used:

Denon AVR3802; Pioneer Elite VSX-27TX and 47TX; B&K 307AVR; Technics (oh my god!) ?????; Rotel RMB1062

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Aug 14, 2002]
Brian Lee
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Power, well bananced, build quality and look.

Weakness:

Lack of pure direct botton form pure audio

I bought this unit 3 years ago, and I’m very happy with it in playing pure audio or watching movies. At the beginning, I use it to drive a pair of Denmark bookshelf speakers, the effect is not bad, but lack of bass, however, with the compensation of a sub-woofer the problem can be solved. However, the sound from sub-woofer is slow and soft, I prefer to use a larger speaker. I bought a pair of B&W N804 a year ago, I didn’t expect the DSP-A1 can drive it so well, I just can’t believe that the sound is well balanced and so dynamic at the same time very details. No one would think to use such a “cheap” amp to drive a much high-end speaker like the B&W N804. Anyway, the DSP-A1 has the ability to drive it so well. I have taken the sub-woofer away after hooking with the N804, the sound stage has been improved, better bass response etc.

Similar Products Used:

No other amp is better than that in its price range

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 30, 2002]
bilbo1992
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

number of options,the faithfulness of sound, built, the weight (28 kilos - I just love it!)

Weakness:

I am not sure about one thing. It's got a digitally controlled volume; what confuses me is the amplifier's graphical indicator, which shows half of the overall volume when the amp is in fact turned up to 50 db (50 db with other amps is only "twenty to nine" position on ordinary volume meters. Can anyone tell me something about this?

I have in fact DSP AX1 model, which is a newer version of A1 as I gather. It is an excellent amp (something like BMW in car indsustry); number of facilities - you don't even know whether you set it up correctly. It is a truly esoteric amp - some of us probably do not even appreciate how good the thing is.

Similar Products Used:

Technics SDAX 940

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 27, 2002]
Dairybeats
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Power, facilities, ease of use, good looking...

Weakness:

None I can think of.

I own two of them. The first one was bought for $ 1.600 in a sale. 6 Months later, in the next sale, it had dropped to 1.200. Being so pleased with the first one, I decided to get an other one for my 'normal' system in the livingroom. In my top system it's used in combination with my fantastic Klipsch RF-7. Before the Klipsch they drove a pair of hefty Infinity Kappa 100 with ease. The amp. has got plenty of power, for high quality stereo or Dolby 5.1 or DTS digital surround. It's very friendly in operating, with plenty of facilities and sound possibilities for surround. What more to say; I 'love' them...

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Dec 04, 2001]
Terry B
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

Outstanding number of options. Sound is excellent.

Weakness:

Outstanding number of options maybe to many. Confusing to hook up and somewhat difficult to understand all the set up options... I'm not even sure if I have it all hooked up correctly.

I'm very happy with my system except for my Sun subwoofer. I have B & W speakers which I'm very pleased with. The DSP-1 seems to compliment the rest of my system well. I could wish for some more automation. I change some system options like surround mode to enhance different music I play and I have to reset for each CD.
The setup is somewhat confusing. I wish there was a setting up the Yamaha DSP-1 for dummies book out there otherwise I'm very happy with the system that I have. I would buy the receiver again if I had it to do over. The subwoofer on the other hand....

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
4
[Dec 21, 2001]
jeff
Audio Enthusiast

Strength:

definetly a unit to grow into, change balance level of ALL speakers, reproduction of material, sound field programs,

Weakness:

ABSOLUTLEY NONE

This is the first serious amp/reciever that i purchased into somewhat audiophile quality. I had a budget of about $1000 on a pre amp or reciever/amp and probably was settling on Yamaha's RVX1095 when i walked into THE WIZ oneday and saw this Bad Boy as a demo unit for sale at $1000. I practicly did'nt leave it and shouted for a salesman to come and take it to the counter. I knew this unit goes for about $2000 new.
I originaly hooked this unit up to a pair of Polk audio RT2000 speaker which i blew 5 times with this unit.. Also had the Bose AM 15 as surround system.. The Polks went back and in came the Infinity IL 50's. they left also. Now the Paradigm studio 100's.. PERFECT ..the Bose eventually left also..
I must admit when i first hooked this up trying to get it right took about 6 to 12 months of experimenting. It is not confusing at all , but the configurations you can do with this unit is endless. I have had mine for year and a half and still pull it out every 2 months to try something new.
The sound that this produces is ok for listeners below the 85Db level.. If you have top quality speakers. Mine just could'nt handle from the reciever any thing past the 12 o'clock position on the volume knob. After purchasing an amplifier to do some justice, it was like a happy marraige.
this baby can do anything you want and more. So many inputs for speakers makes you think silly 3 subwoofers, 3 center channels, 2 mains, 2 rear surround, and 2 front channels. I'm not wrong about that either ..
I never get tired of this unit because there is so much to learn and grow into. How can you get that for $1000 anywhere??
Hats off to Yamaha for making an excellent product. Even if you can pick this unit up for $900 or less, its a steal. Just if you play it real loud with great speakers you will need an additional amplifier..

Similar Products Used:

Laugh at models

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
Showing 1-8 of 8  

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